A health insurance mobile application for UCLA students expanded its medication and prescription features this year.

The University of California Student Health Insurance Plan expanded the services of one of its mobile apps, OptumRx, which it started using in 2015, saidBarbara Rabinowitz, insurance manager for UCLA Arthur Ashe Student Wellness and Health Center. Students can accessinformation about prescriptions covered by their plan and fill their prescriptions at UCLA’s pharmacy, she added.

Students can also use the StudentHealth app to manage their UC SHIP coverage. Anthem Blue Cross, a health insurance provider for UC SHIP, stopped issuing ID cards at the beginning of the 2015-2016 academic year, Rabinowitz said. Students can instead download StudentHealth to access their medical and vision insurance cards.

Rabinowitz said the app alsoallows students to look up an explanation of their UC SHIP coverage and find a UC SHIPprovider. She added this feature is useful for students who are traveling because they can use the app at other urgent care centers.

UC SHIP decided to introduce the StudentHealth app because Student Advisory Committees at UC campuses said students wanted a mobile app to access their health data instead of using ID cards, Rabinowitz said.

Rabinowitz added the app has been cost effective because Anthem Blue Cross used to mail students their ID cards, but 70 percent of cards, which cost $3 per card to mail, did not successfully reach students.

Although Ashe Center requires that students have the app for identification reasons, students may still request to get a physical card from Anthem Blue Cross, Rabinowitz added.

Some students who have used the mobile app said they think it has been helpful but can be inconvenient.

Anna Szymanska, a second-year human biology and society student, said she could not use the app away fromUCLA when she downloaded it last year.

“When I went to get vaccinations in other states, I could not use the app or my UC SHIP coverage,” she said. “I don’t have any way to pay for anything and I don’t have any other insurance.”

Brenna Fekete, a third-year psychobiology student said she likes the app because it centralizes her health insurance information.

“It’s really convenient going into appointments and checking in with the app,” she said. “But sometimes, it’s annoying when the internet isn’t working and I’m trying to check in Ashe, which has happened to me several times.”

Poll

The Associated Students UCLA announced in October that the price of dorm coupons, which allow students living on the Hill to trade meal swipes for coupons that can be used with on-campus food vendors, have increased by $1. Now, a meal swipe can be swapped for a coupon worth $3.45. What do you think about this?
The moderate increase is a welcome step toward ensuring students living on the Hill can also eat on campus at lower costs.
The increase continues to overcharge students and causes them to lose their meal swipes’ value.
This increase is of little consequence, as few are inclined to use the coupon service.
I have feelings about this issue that are not expressed in the options above.
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